If we have a decent machine workshop and a supply of steel, manufacturing blades won't be all that difficult. If you have a powerful enough press, all you need to have is a suitably shaped starting block of steel, squash it flat, fold, stamp it again, repeat, say 20 times, and you will have a ready, cold-forged Damascus-steel blade. A little experimentation on that should give the best length and shape of the initial block, and it wouldn't be that difficult.Knife wrote:I would think that we would need to buy or trade for them anyway. We do have people that could start playing with making our own blades but it would be a project that would take a while to produce a sword that would be equal or better than the local ones.
I didn't just pull this out of my hat, one time when I was going home on the metro, this skinny-looking, garrulous guy sat down opposite me and started talking, he was a smith, had been for 45+ years and talked my ear off, and described having made knives like that, from discarded pieces of steel. Usually people like that annoy me, but he talked on an interesting topic, knew a shitload of stuff and was funny to boot. His musculature, what I could see of it, also backed up his claim of being a smith, I mean he was a whiplash type build, but you could see the way the tendons and muscles and everything on his hands were that he'd probably have been able to break your neck very easily.
There's been a lot of talk on metal armor and all that, well, imo hard boiled leather is better. It's tough, light, allows for pretty flexible movement and doesn't slow you down. It's easier to maufacture than metal armor too. A friend of mine has a suit made by another friend's father, and it'd take a seriously strong thrust with a knife or a sword to go through it, they tested it with a knife. Bent the knife blade and just nicked the armor.
As for metal armor in general and plate in particular, it's not justthe Swiss pike that made it obsolete, the longbow did, there was a reason why the French lost at Crecy and Agincourt. Read up on your history, people.
Edi